DocketNumber: Appeals, 72 and 73
Citation Numbers: 169 A. 435, 313 Pa. 230, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 639
Judges: Frazer, Simpson, Kephart, Schaeeer, Drew, Linn
Filed Date: 4/11/1933
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Argued April 11, 1933.
These appeals raise the same question decided in Paraska v. Scranton [the preceding case]. In this case, however, our examination of the record discloses no evidence of negligence on the part of defendant to submit to the jury. Here the accident occurred when an eleven-year-old girl fell and received injury in a public playground while in the act of climbing over a wire fence, separating two parts of the playground, to reach a drinking fountain. Safe access to the fountain was provided by another route slightly longer but well known to the children and within a short distance of the place of accident. The fence was firmly constructed and entirely sufficient for the purpose for which intended. We are of opinion the injury resulted, not from the failure of the municipality to provide a proper barrier, but from the child's act in "venturing in childish recklessness where no one, child or adult, had any business to be": Guilmartin v. Philadelphia,
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
McHugh Et Ux. v. Reading Co. , 346 Pa. 266 ( 1943 )
Onstott v. Allegheny County , 338 Pa. 206 ( 1940 )
Bonczek v. Philadelphia , 338 Pa. 484 ( 1940 )
Wright v. Pennsylvania Railroad , 314 Pa. 222 ( 1934 )
Williams v. Overly Manufacturing Co. , 153 Pa. Super. 347 ( 1943 )
Bagby Ex Rel. Bagby v. Kansas City , 338 Mo. 771 ( 1936 )
Lindsay v. Glen Alden Coal Co. , 318 Pa. 133 ( 1935 )